Detroit Protesters Win Temporary Reprieve From Water Shut-Offs
The city of Detroit is putting a 15-day moratorium on water shut-offs to thousands of households following escalating public protests against what critics charge is a mass-scale human rights violation.
“There is no question this is the result of all of the pressure that has come to the city of Detroit,” Shea Howell of the People’s Water Board and Detroiters Resisting Emergency Management told Common Dreams.
Darryl Latimer, deputy director for the Detroit Water and Sewerage Department, announced the temporary suspension of disconnections to Detroit’s bankruptcy judge, Steven Rhodes, in federal court on Monday, according to numerous media reports. He said that the pause in disconnections—ostensibly aimed at identifying and providing assistance to hardship cases—will not affect the city’s push to collect payments from people who have fallen behind on their bills.
“Everyone shut-off needs to be turned back on.”
—Shea Howell, People’s Water Board, Detroiters Resisting Emergency Management
Rhodes has previously condemned the water shut-offs for generating “bad publicity” for the city but has fallen short of ordering a halt.
The announcement coincided with a lawsuit filed Monday with the bankruptcy court charging that the shut-offs violate Detroiters’ constitutional rights. “Water service to private residences is the most basic and essential utility service, and is necessary for the health and safety of the residents,” the filing reads, according to media reports.
The moratorium follows rising public outrage after DWSD announced last month it is implementing a plan to escalate the number of delinquent households to be shut-off to at least 3,000 a month. Nearly half of all Detroit residents are behind on their water payments, and at least 7,000 people were disconnected in June alone. The pool of people unable to pay is likely to expand as the city continues to cut public services, including welfare and public pensions, while in the midst of foreclosure and unemployment crises.
Many residents of this majority black city suspect that the disconnections are part of a larger plan, backed by emergency manager Kevyn Orr, to privatize the DWSD and, ultimately, displace poor communities of color to make way for gentrification.
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